Saturday, August 11, 2012

London reading...

I had an email from Stephanie a while back...

I'm coming to London in September and am reading many things in preparation.Forgetting Dickens' novels for just a tick are there any books (I'm thinking novels, but I'll take any suggestions) that just embody London for you? Something that especially captures the spirit of the place?

Shall I ask the blog? I replied...

That would be FABULOUS!!

And with the eyes of the world on London right now, this seems like a good time to ask you all.

I hope you will agree that London has been looking spectacular through the Olympics, all the sights of the city on the various courses, even the rooftops on all the aerial shots seem swept and manicured, and the city displayed at every turn right down to the jumps on the equestrian course. What a party this has been and though I will be chewing my knitting today willing Tom Daley to pike and flip and twist and end up headlong into the water from ten metres up, I will also be looking forward to the promise of a Closing Ceremony to beat all Closing Ceremonies tomorrow night. Rumour is rife from Pink Floyd to the Royal Ballet to Ray Davies of The Kinks singing Waterloo Sunset.

So before London waves cheerio to the Olympics and the focus shifts to the Paralympics, and though I know Stephanie has asked for novels, and I feel sure you will all suggest plenty, my starters for ten are both non-fiction and would be as follows...

Londoners - The Days and Nights of London Now - As Told by Those Who Love It, Hate It, Live It, Left It and Long for It by Craig Taylor.

This book arrived almost the same day that Mrs KFC e mailed all the way from Canada to let me know about this brilliant book on London that she thought I might enjoy. I picked it up, and though I haven't read past the first fifty pages yet, what I have read so far has had my full attention. Craig Taylor has gathered every voice in the city between two covers, from the announcer on the London Underground, to a Guardsman at Buckingham Palace along with market traders, rickshaw riders, chefs, students, commuters et al. It feels like a true and fascinating insight into the multi-cultural city that London has become.

My second choice and a book that I love and would recommend to anyone heading London way is Badaude'sLondon Walks . The twenty two walks, three bus rides and one boat trip are varied and unusual and all illustrated with Badaude's wonderful eye for detail and for the quirky eccentricities so often overlooked. I look at it frequently and it is easy to imagine yourself walking the streets of London as you pore over the minute details on every page, even better to walk some of them next time you are in the city.

And a very happy final Olympic weekend everyone. I don't know about you but our TV is nearing melting point and will be grateful for the respite, but thank you for joining in with the party and for bearing with the diversion from the usual here. We have a few more Port Eliot posts still to come, and then Team Middlemarch gathering over the weekend of August 25th... normal service should be resumed in September, whatever 'normal' is.

So over to you... any books that embody London for you and that you would recommend to Stephanie ... books that capture that spirit of place??

If any suggestions come in I will edit them into a list on this blog post for easy reference, and I am now thinking of loads more but you go first.

Secret London - An Unusual Guide The Water Room by Christopher Fowler The Hours by Michael Cunningham.Duchess of Bloomsbury Street by Helene Hanff One Million Tiny Plays about Britain by Craig Taylor. Spitalfields Life by The Gentle Author (who I met at Port Eliot festival, but keeping the faith on no pics, no ID)Peter Ackroyd's "London the biography"Tony Judt's The Memory ChaletJohnson's Life of London -Boris JohnsonThe Annals of London: A Year by Year Record of a Thousand Years of History by John RichardsonHawksmoor by Peter AckroydWilliam Boyd's 'Ordinary Thunderstorms'.The Fields Beneath by Gillian Tindall A Taste for Death by P.D.JamesDown and Out in Paris and London - George OrwellKeith Waterhouse's "Soho"The Girls of Slender Means - Muriel SparkMortal Engines - Philip ReeveJennie - Paul GallicoGranta issue #65 "London - The Lives of the City"Mirosla Sasek, “This is London” Mrs Dalloway - Virginia WoolfZadie Smith - White TeethSebastian Faulks - A Week in DecemberAlan Hollinghurst - The Line of BeautyVirginia Woolf - Mrs DallowayMichel Faber - The Crimson Petal and the WhiteJohn Lanchester - Mr PhillipsSarah Waters - The Night WatchHenry Mayhew's "London Labour and the London Poor" London Belongs to Me - Norman CollinsPevsner Architectural Guides to London1966 "Companion Guide" to Lodon (John Piper)"The Birds of the London Area" London Natural History Society "London's Disused Underground Stations" by J E Connor"London Illustrated Geological Walks" by E RobinsonThe Quincunx - Charles PalliserThe Strange History of Buckingham Palace" by Patricia Wright Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont, Elizabeth Taylor Falling Slowly - Anita BrooknerFamily and Friends - Anita Brookner Strangers - Anita BrooknerBrick Lane - Monica AliA Kid for Two Farthings - Wolf MankowitzLondon Bridges - Jane StevensonLights out for the territory - Iain SinclairSorrows of the Moon - Iqbal Ahmed

Comments

London reading...

I had an email from Stephanie a while back...

I'm coming to London in September and am reading many things in preparation.Forgetting Dickens' novels for just a tick are there any books (I'm thinking novels, but I'll take any suggestions) that just embody London for you? Something that especially captures the spirit of the place?

Shall I ask the blog? I replied...

That would be FABULOUS!!

And with the eyes of the world on London right now, this seems like a good time to ask you all.

I hope you will agree that London has been looking spectacular through the Olympics, all the sights of the city on the various courses, even the rooftops on all the aerial shots seem swept and manicured, and the city displayed at every turn right down to the jumps on the equestrian course. What a party this has been and though I will be chewing my knitting today willing Tom Daley to pike and flip and twist and end up headlong into the water from ten metres up, I will also be looking forward to the promise of a Closing Ceremony to beat all Closing Ceremonies tomorrow night. Rumour is rife from Pink Floyd to the Royal Ballet to Ray Davies of The Kinks singing Waterloo Sunset.

So before London waves cheerio to the Olympics and the focus shifts to the Paralympics, and though I know Stephanie has asked for novels, and I feel sure you will all suggest plenty, my starters for ten are both non-fiction and would be as follows...

Londoners - The Days and Nights of London Now - As Told by Those Who Love It, Hate It, Live It, Left It and Long for It by Craig Taylor.

This book arrived almost the same day that Mrs KFC e mailed all the way from Canada to let me know about this brilliant book on London that she thought I might enjoy. I picked it up, and though I haven't read past the first fifty pages yet, what I have read so far has had my full attention. Craig Taylor has gathered every voice in the city between two covers, from the announcer on the London Underground, to a Guardsman at Buckingham Palace along with market traders, rickshaw riders, chefs, students, commuters et al. It feels like a true and fascinating insight into the multi-cultural city that London has become.

My second choice and a book that I love and would recommend to anyone heading London way is Badaude'sLondon Walks . The twenty two walks, three bus rides and one boat trip are varied and unusual and all illustrated with Badaude's wonderful eye for detail and for the quirky eccentricities so often overlooked. I look at it frequently and it is easy to imagine yourself walking the streets of London as you pore over the minute details on every page, even better to walk some of them next time you are in the city.

And a very happy final Olympic weekend everyone. I don't know about you but our TV is nearing melting point and will be grateful for the respite, but thank you for joining in with the party and for bearing with the diversion from the usual here. We have a few more Port Eliot posts still to come, and then Team Middlemarch gathering over the weekend of August 25th... normal service should be resumed in September, whatever 'normal' is.

So over to you... any books that embody London for you and that you would recommend to Stephanie ... books that capture that spirit of place??

If any suggestions come in I will edit them into a list on this blog post for easy reference, and I am now thinking of loads more but you go first.

Secret London - An Unusual Guide The Water Room by Christopher Fowler The Hours by Michael Cunningham.Duchess of Bloomsbury Street by Helene Hanff One Million Tiny Plays about Britain by Craig Taylor. Spitalfields Life by The Gentle Author (who I met at Port Eliot festival, but keeping the faith on no pics, no ID)Peter Ackroyd's "London the biography"Tony Judt's The Memory ChaletJohnson's Life of London -Boris JohnsonThe Annals of London: A Year by Year Record of a Thousand Years of History by John RichardsonHawksmoor by Peter AckroydWilliam Boyd's 'Ordinary Thunderstorms'.The Fields Beneath by Gillian Tindall A Taste for Death by P.D.JamesDown and Out in Paris and London - George OrwellKeith Waterhouse's "Soho"The Girls of Slender Means - Muriel SparkMortal Engines - Philip ReeveJennie - Paul GallicoGranta issue #65 "London - The Lives of the City"Mirosla Sasek, “This is London” Mrs Dalloway - Virginia WoolfZadie Smith - White TeethSebastian Faulks - A Week in DecemberAlan Hollinghurst - The Line of BeautyVirginia Woolf - Mrs DallowayMichel Faber - The Crimson Petal and the WhiteJohn Lanchester - Mr PhillipsSarah Waters - The Night WatchHenry Mayhew's "London Labour and the London Poor" London Belongs to Me - Norman CollinsPevsner Architectural Guides to London1966 "Companion Guide" to Lodon (John Piper)"The Birds of the London Area" London Natural History Society "London's Disused Underground Stations" by J E Connor"London Illustrated Geological Walks" by E RobinsonThe Quincunx - Charles PalliserThe Strange History of Buckingham Palace" by Patricia Wright Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont, Elizabeth Taylor Falling Slowly - Anita BrooknerFamily and Friends - Anita Brookner Strangers - Anita BrooknerBrick Lane - Monica AliA Kid for Two Farthings - Wolf MankowitzLondon Bridges - Jane StevensonLights out for the territory - Iain SinclairSorrows of the Moon - Iqbal Ahmed

Constants...

Team Tolstoy

Team TolstoyA year-long shared read of War & Peace through the centenary year of Count Lyev Nikolayevich Tolstoy's death, starting on his birthday, September 9th 2010.
Everyone is welcome to board the troika and read along, meeting here on the 9th of every month to chat in comments about the book.

Team Tolstoy BookmarkDon't know your Bolkonskys from your Rostovs?
An aide memoire that can be niftily printed and laminated into a double-sided bookmark.

Port Eliot Festival

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